Florida Democrats reaffirm Jan. 29 primary De

PEMBROKE PINES The Florida Democratic Party is sticking to its primary date and even printed bumper stickers to prove it.

State party leaders formally announced on Sunday their plans to move ahead with a Jan. 29 primary, despite the national leadership's threatened sanctions for doing so.

The Democratic National Committee has said it will strip the Sunshine State of its 210 nominating convention delegates if it doesn't abide by the party-set calendar, which forbids most states from holding primary contests before Feb. 5. The exceptions are Iowa on Jan. 14, Nevada on Jan. 19, New Hampshire on Jan. 22 and South Carolina on Jan. 29.

Michigan has also leapfrogged the national party's order by scheduling a Jan. 15 primary.

Florida's Democratic leadership say they want their key swing state to play a bigger role in choosing the party's nominee.

"The 4 million Florida Democrats will be enfranchised," U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz said at a news conference announcing the decision. "We will make sure Florida Democrats have a voice and that voice will be heard."

The state party will proceed with its usual delegate selection process for the convention in 2008, Schultz said, "and we fully expect that delegation to be seated."

Florida Democratic Party chairwoman Karen Thurman said the state leadership looked at other alternatives like a mail-in primary or a caucus.

"But at the end of the day, we came down on the side of having a fair and open election, along with making sure that we had a lot of representation in this state," Thurman said.

State Senate Democratic Leader Steve Geller blamed what he called the four "rouge states" that hold early nominating contests for creating problems. He charged them with being behind the national party's decision to punish presidential candidates who campaign in states that leapfrog the set order.

"I don't see how it's not a violation of the voting rights act," Geller said, because Florida voters will now only be able to hear candidates speak at private functions, which have an entry fee.

Carol Stender, a Hollywood, Fla. resident, said she applauded the state party's decision to stick with its early contest. Voters outside Iowa and New Hampshire have traditionally felt like their votes in the primary don't matter, Stender said. "It's time for everybody to stand up and say, 'Hey, my vote has to count, too."'

But not everyone at the announcement was a fan.

"I don't agree with it at all," said Howard Paley of Pembroke Pines. "If we're going to be deprived of delegates, I think it's a waste of time."